Noonan Construction Company, Inc., Cross-Appellee v. Warren Brothers Company, Cross-Appellant

632 F.2d 1189, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 11418
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1980
Docket79-2401
StatusPublished

This text of 632 F.2d 1189 (Noonan Construction Company, Inc., Cross-Appellee v. Warren Brothers Company, Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noonan Construction Company, Inc., Cross-Appellee v. Warren Brothers Company, Cross-Appellant, 632 F.2d 1189, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 11418 (5th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

In August 1976 Noonan Construction, Inc., bid on a contract to pave a ten mile stretch of U.S. Highway 49, south of Yazoo City, Mississippi. The bid, based partly on cost estimates for sand and gravel to be supplied by Warren Brothers Company, was the lowest offered and Noonan was awarded the contract. As hereinafter appears, the contract experience turned out not to be all peaches and cream.

In late 1976, after' preliminary discussions, Warren sent Noonan its standard form contract, specifying prices for washed gravel and washed sand for all of Noonan’s needs for the Yazoo project.

On January 3, 1977, Noonan and W. E. Blain & Sons, Inc., entered into a joint venture agreement wherein Blain was to lay the soil cement base upon which Noonan would lay down the concrete paving after waiting seven days for the soil cement to “cure”.

After being awarded the Yazoo County contract, Noonan sought and obtained another highway paving project, some 200 miles away in Marshall County, Mississippi. The fly in that ointment was that Noonan had only one mobile paving unit, whereas it had obligated itself to do two widely separated paving jobs. Consequently, Noonan had to complete the Yazoo project before it could move to and begin work on the Marshall County project. It planned to do the Yazoo paving from June to the end of August, 1977, thereafter beginning the Marshall County project in the middle of September. Noonan testified that rain and freezing weather will slow down and ultimately halt paving work; therefore, Noonan needed tó finish the Yazoo County project and thereafter begin the Marshall County project in time to finish it before cold weather halted work for the winter.

Just how much Warren knew of Noonan’s Marshall County project is the subject of dispute. Noonan did get sand and gravel estimates for the Marshall County project from Warren, although it ultimately subcontracted this to someone else. Warren says these estimates came from its Memphis *1191 office and that its Mississippi office had no actual notice of the Marshall County project. Noonan says it discussed its telescoped time schedule with the President of Warren’s Mississippi branch, Dick Durgan.

The standard form contract which Warren sent Noonan provided on its face that “This proposal shall be void if not accepted within thirty days after the date hereof as set forth above,” but it carried no date; it is undisputed, however, that the contract form was sent and received in late 1976.

Noonan claims that its President, W. J. Noonan, Jr., talked with Dick Durgan, of Warren, about two details in the contract which Noonan wanted changed: (1) Noonan, rather than Warren, would deliver the sand and gravel to the project site and (2) Noonan needed a specified minimum amount of said and gravel per day. Warren denies that such pre-contract oral dis cussions ever took place.

Ultimately, Noonan signed the Warren contract, dated it 22 March 1977, and returned it after striking the following sentence: “Warren agrees to haul material to Noonan’s stockpile & dump (not stockpile) for an additional compensation of $0.35 per ton.” Along with the amended contract Noonan sent along a cover letter dated 24 March 1977, addressed to Mr. David Barton (of Warren Brothers). The cover letter included this sentence: “In accordance with my recent discussions with Dick Durgan, we will haul this material in our trucks per your original quotation, and we need to haul a daily minimum of 2000 tons in an approximate ratio of 2 gravel and 1 sand.” [Emphasis added.]

Upon receiving the amended contract and the cover letter, Warren gave no notice of rejecting the contract although it could have done so because it had been returned more than 30 days after its receipt by Noonan. Warren went along with Noonan’s offer to haul the sand and gravel in its own trucks. It made no response to Noonan’s letter assertion that it needed a minimum of 1333.3 tons of gravel and 666.7 tons of sand per day.

So far, so good-as dealings between contractors generally go. But the end is not yet.

Warren’s machinery began to break down and Noonan began to pressure Warren for the minimum amount of sand and gravel. Warren did not deny that it obligated itself to provide the desired minimum. Rather, Warren made substantial efforts to supply Noonan with the 2000 tons of gravel and sand at a ratio of 2 gravel to 1 sand.

The contract between Warren and Noonan had not specified when production of sand and gravel would begin or when Noonan would begin paving. Although Noonan put its equipment on Warren’s property as allowed by the contract, and although it claims it intended to begin paving in mid-June, no paving was actually begun until July 17, 1977. Blain, whose work had to be done before Noonan could do the paving, began in early 1977 and was finished by September 27, 1977, although it appears from the record that Blain finished the “main line” work on August 15.

Noonan claims that between June 18 and September 27, 1977, there were forty two days in which Warren failed to provide the minimum amount of sand and gravel. Because of this delay, says Noonan, the Yazoo County project which should have been finished by September 1, 1977, was delayed until September 27, 1977. Hence work could not begin on the Marshall County project until October 7. This late start, combined with poor weather in Marshall County, delayed the completion of that project until March 23, 1978. Apparently, the “main line” work was completed by December 15 but the off ramps could not be completed until March 23, 1978.

Noonan withheld the last payment due Warren September 15, 1977 ($100,912.40). On March 2, 1978, Noonan filed a diversity action charging Warren with breach of contract and common law negligence. The breach of contract action was based on Warren’s failure to furnish the minimum amount of sand and gravel assertedly required by the contract and Noonan’s cover letter. The alleged negligence was that *1192 Warren had failed to exercise due care in maintaining its own equipment and thus delayed delivery of the material. Noonan asked for $242,314.54 damages.

Warren counterclaimed for the unpaid $100,912.40 and for interest and attorney’s fees.

The case was tried to judge and jury April 26, 27 and 30, 1979. There was a directed verdict for Warren on Noonan’s negligence claim. The alleged breach of contract and Warren’s counterclaim went to the jury. It found for Warren in all respects, finding no breach of contract, and awarding Warren $129,581.11 on the counterclaim, plus $10,000 attorney’s fees.

Except for the judgment on the counterclaim, the unhorsed plaintiff appeals, claiming that because of three errors a new trial is required: (1) in not allowing Noonan to introduce into evidence the cover letter which was sent along with the signed contract; (2) in directing a verdict for Warren on the negligence question; and (3) in granting certain jury instructions offered by Warren while rejecting others offered by Noonan.

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Bluebook (online)
632 F.2d 1189, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 11418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noonan-construction-company-inc-cross-appellee-v-warren-brothers-ca5-1980.